I am trying to import data from a utf-8 encoded flat file into SQL Server 2008 using SSIS. This is what the end of the row data looks like in Notepad++:
I have a couple more images showing what the file connection manager looks like:
You can see that the data shows correctly in the file connection manager preview. When I try to import this data, no rows import. I get an error message indicating that the row delimiter was not found. You can see in the file connection manager images that the header row delimiter and the row delimiter are both set to {LF}
. This was sufficient to generate the correct preview, so I am lost to why it did not work to import. I have tried a number of things that have brought zero results:
- Tried using the Wizard import in SSMS...same results
- Tried using data conversion, no impact
- Tried setting the row delimiter to (0a), same results
[Flat File Source [582]] Warning: The end of the data file was reached while reading header rows. Make sure the header row delimiter and the number of header rows to skip are correct.
Thanks for looking at this and I really appreciate any help you can offer.
Cause:
SSIS fails to read the file and displays the below warning due to the column delimiter Ç
("c" with cedilla) and not
due to the line delimiter {LF}
(Line Feed).
[Read flat file [1]] Warning: The end of the data file was reached while
reading header rows. Make sure the header row delimiter and the number of
header rows to skip are correct.
Here is a sample SSIS package that shows how to resolve the issue using Script Component
and at the end there is another example that simulates your issue.
Resolution:
Below sample package is written in SSIS 2008 R2
. It reads a flat file with row delimiter {LF}
as a single column value; then splits the data using Script Component
to insert the information into a table in SQL Server 2008 R2
database.
Use Notepad++ to create a simple flat file with few rows. The below sample file has Product Id and List Price information on each row separated by Ç
as column delimiter and each row ends with {LF}
delimiter.
On the Notepad++, click Encoding
and then click Encoding in UTF-8
to save the flat file in UTF-8
encoding.
The sample will use an SQL Server 2008 R2
database named Sora
. Create a new table named dbo.ProductListPrice
using the below given script. SSIS will insert the flat file data into this table.
USE Sora;
GO
CREATE TABLE dbo.ProductListPrice
(
ProductId nvarchar(30) NOT NULL
, ListPrice numeric(12,2) NOT NULL
);
GO
Create an SSIS package using Business Intelligence Development Studio (BIDS) 2008 R2. Name the package as SO_6268205.dtsx
. Create a data source named Sora.ds
to connect to the database Sora
in SQL Server 2008 R2.
Right-click anywhere inside the package and then click Variables
to view the variables pane. Create a new variable named ColumnDelimiter
of data type String
in the package scope SO_6268205
and set the variable with the value Ç
Right-click on the Connection Managers
and click New Flat File Connection...
to create a connection to read the flat file.
On the General
page of the Flat File Connection Manager Editor, perform the following actions:
- Set Connection manager name to
ProductListPrice
- Set Description to
Flat file connection manager to read product list price information.
- Select the flat file path. I have the file in the path
C:\Siva\StackOverflow\Files\6268205\ProductListPrice.txt
- Select
{LF}
from Header Row Delimiter - Check
Column names in the first data row
- Click
Columns
page
On the Columns
page of the Flat File Connection Manager Editor, verify that the Column delimiter
is blank and disabled. Click Advanced
page.
On the Advanced
page of the Flat File Connection Manager Editor, perform the following actions.
- Set the Name to
LineData
- Verify that the Column delimiter is set to
{LF}
- Set the DataType to
Unicode string [DT_WSTR]
- Set the OutputColumnWidth to
255
- Click the
Preview
page.
On the Preview
page of the Flat File Connection Manager Editor, verify that the displayed data looks correct and click OK
.
You will see the data source Sora and the flat file connection manager ProductListPrice on the Connection Managers
tab at the bottom of the package.
Drag and drop Data Flow Task
onto the Control Flow tab of the package and name it as File to database - Without Cedilla delimiter
Double-click the Data Flow Task to switch the view to the Data Flow
tab on the package. Drag and drop a Flat File Source
on the Data Flow tab. Double-click the Flat File Source to open Flat File Source Editor
.
On the Connection Manager
page of the Flat File Source Editor, select the Flat File Connection Manager ProductListPrice
and click Columns page.
On the Columns
page of the Flat File Source Editor, check the column LineData
and click OK
.
Drag and drop a Script Component
onto the Data Flow tab below the Flat File Source, select Transformation
and click OK
. Connect the green arrow from Flat File Source to Script Component. Double-click Script Component to open Script Transformation Editor
.
Click Input Columns on Script Transformation Editor and select LineData
column. Click Inputs and Outputs page.
On the Inputs and Outputs
page of the Script Transformation Editor, perform the following actions.
- Change the inputs name to FlatFileInput
- Change the outputs name to
SplitDataOutput
- Select Output Columns and click
Add Column
. Repeat this again to add another column. - Name the first column
ProductId
- Set the DataType of column ProductId to
Unicode string [DT_WSTR]
- Set the Length to
30
On the Inputs and Outputs
page of the Script Transformation Editor, perform the following actions.
- Name the second column
ListPrice
- Set the DataType of column ListPrice to
numeric [DT_NUMERIC]
- Set the Precision to
12
- Set the Scale to
2
- Click Script page to modify the script
On the Script
page of the Script Transformation Editor, perform the following actions.
- Click the ellipsis button against ReadOnlyVariables and select the variable
User::ColumnDelimiter
- Click
Edit Script...
Paste the below C# in the Script Editor. The script performs the following tasks.
- Using the column delimiter value
Ç
defined in the variable User::ColumnDelimiter, the methodFlatFileInput_ProcessInputRow
splits the incoming value and assigns it to the two output columns defined in the Script Component transformation.
Script component code in C#
using System;
using System.Data;
using Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Pipeline.Wrapper;
using Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime.Wrapper;
[Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Pipeline.SSISScriptComponentEntryPointAttribute]
public class ScriptMain : UserComponent
{
public override void PreExecute()
{
base.PreExecute();
}
public override void PostExecute()
{
base.PostExecute();
}
public override void FlatFileInput_ProcessInputRow(FlatFileInputBuffer Row)
{
const int COL_PRODUCT = 0;
const int COL_PRICE = 1;
char delimiter = Convert.ToChar(this.Variables.ColumnDelimiter);
string[] lineData = Row.LineData.ToString().Split(delimiter);
Row.ProductId = String.IsNullOrEmpty(lineData[COL_PRODUCT])
? String.Empty
: lineData[COL_PRODUCT];
Row.ListPrice = String.IsNullOrEmpty(lineData[COL_PRICE])
? 0
: Convert.ToDecimal(lineData[COL_PRICE]);
}
}
Drag and drop OLE DB Destination
onto the Data Flow tab. Connect the green arrow from Script Component to OLE DB Destination. Double-click OLE DB Destination to open OLE DB Destination Editor
.
On the Connection Manager
page of the OLE DB Destination Editor, perform the following actions.
- Select
Sora
from OLE DB Connection Manager - Select
Table or view - fast load
from Data access mode - Select
[dbo].[ProductListPrice]
from Name of the table or the view - Click Mappings page
Click Mappings
page on the OLE DB Destination Editor would automatically map the columns if the input and output column names are same. Click OK
.
Data Flow tab should look something like this after configuring all the components.
Execute the query select * from dbo.ProductListPrice
in the SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS) to find the number of rows in the table. It should be empty before executing the package.
Execute the package. You will notice that the package successfully processed 9 rows. The flat file contains 10 lines but the first row is header with column names.
Execute the query select * from dbo.ProductListPrice
in the SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS) to find the 9 rows successfully inserted into the table. The data should match with flat file data.
The above example illustrated how to manually split the data using Script Component because the Flat File Connection Manager encounters error when configured the column delimiter Ç
Issue Simulation:
This example shows a separate Flat File Connection Manager configured with column delimiter Ç
, which executes but encounters a warning and does not process any lines.
Right-click on the Connection Managers
and click New Flat File Connection...
to create a connection to read the flat file. On the General
page of the Flat File Connection Manager Editor, perform the following actions:
- Set Connection manager name to
ProductListPrice_Cedilla
- Set Description to
Flat file connection manager with Cedilla column delimiter.
- I have the file in the path
C:\Siva\StackOverflow\Files\6268205\ProductListPrice.txt
Select the flat file path. - Select
{LF}
from Header Row Delimiter - Check
Column names in the first data row
- Click
Columns
page
On the Columns
page of the Flat File Connection Manager Editor, perform the following actions:
- Set Row delimiter to
{LF}
- The column delimiter field may be disabled. Click
Reset Columns
- Set Column delimiter to
Ç
- Click
Advanced
page
On the Advanced
page of the Flat File Connection Manager Editor, perform the following actions:
- Set the Name to
ProductId
- Set the ColumnDelimiter to
Ç
- Set the DataType to
Unicode string [DT_WSTR]
- Set the Length to
30
- Click column
ListPrice
On the Advanced
page of the Flat File Connection Manager Editor, perform the following actions:
- Set the Name to
ListPrice
- Set the ColumnDelimiter to
{LF}
- Set the DataType to
numeric [DT_NUMERIC]
- Set the DataPrecision to
12
- Set the DataScale to
2
- Click
OK
Drag and drop a Data Flow task
onto the Control Flow tab and name it as File to database - With Cedilla delimiter
. Disable the first data flow task.
Configure the second data flow task with Flat File Source
and OLE DB Destination
Double-click the Flat File Source to open Flat File Source Editor
. On the Connection Manager
page of the Flat File Source Editor, select the Flat File Connection Manager ProductListPrice_Cedilla
and click Columns page to configure the columns. Click OK
.
Execute the package. All the components will display green color to indicate that the process was success but no rows will be processed. You can see that there are no rows numbers indication between the Flat File Source
and OLE DB Destination
Click the Progress
tab and you will notice the following warning message.
[Read flat file [1]] Warning: The end of the data file was reached while
reading header rows. Make sure the header row delimiter and the number of
header rows to skip are correct.
Answer above seems awfully complicated, just convert the line endings in the file
Dim FileContents As String = My.Computer.FileSystem.ReadAllText("c:\Temp\UnixFile.csv")
Dim NewFileContents As String = FileContents.Replace(vbLf, vbCrLf)
My.Computer.FileSystem.WriteAllText("c:\temp\WindowsFile.csv", NewFileContents, False, New System.Text.UnicodeEncoding)
Rehashed from here
This issue also arises if you are trying to consume FlatFile generated on a different platform like Unix, Mac etc via SSIS on windows
In such a scenario all you need to do is convert the file format from say UNIX to DOS with unix2dos command
unix2dos file-to-convert
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6268205/why-doesnt-ssis-recognize-line-feed-lf-row-delimiter-while-importing-utf-8-fl